The landlord-tenant relationship has a reputation problem. And the basic gist of it comes down to a couple of misconceptions:
- Tenants assume their landlord doesn’t care.
- Landlords assume their tenants will take advantage of any kindness shown.
As a result of these thought patterns, both sides operate from a defensive posture, and the relationship suffers before it ever has a chance to develop into something functional.
The reality is that the landlords who build good relationships with their tenants tend to have lower turnover, fewer disputes, better-maintained properties, and more consistent rental income. In other words, being a good landlord is a business strategy that pays real returns. If you want to be the exception, start by understanding where most landlords go wrong.
- Slow or Nonexistent Communication
This is the complaint that shows up more than any other in tenant surveys and reviews. The tenant submits a maintenance request or sends a message with a question, and days go by without a response. Or worse, the message disappears into a void and never gets acknowledged at all.
From the landlord’s side, it’s understandable. You’re busy and probably have a full-time job on top of managing the property. The problem is that your tenant doesn’t see any of that context. They’re living with a problem and need it fixed.
The solution is straightforward, but it does require commitment. Acknowledge every communication within 24 hours, even if the full resolution takes longer. A quick “Got your message, looking into it, will follow up by Thursday” does more for the relationship than a perfect response that arrives a week late.
If you’re managing multiple properties and communication is consistently falling through the cracks, hiring a property management company is something worth considering. A good property manager provides a reliable point of contact for tenants. They ensure that messages, maintenance requests, and concerns get addressed as soon as possible. The result is a more consistent experience, which breeds trust.
- Treating Maintenance Like an Inconvenience
Nothing erodes a tenant’s goodwill faster than making them feel like their maintenance requests are a burden. Landlords who treat maintenance as a cost rather than a responsibility create resentment at every step of the way. It makes tenants feel like their living conditions don’t matter to the landlord, which means they eventually stop reporting small problems. And when their lease is up, they leave.
Flip this by treating maintenance as one of your primary obligations. For urgent issues like heat, water, and safety concerns, have a same-day response plan. When you do complete a repair, follow up with the tenant to confirm the issue is resolved. That follow-up takes 30 seconds and communicates that you care.
- Being Invisible Until Rent Is Due
Some landlords operate on a model where the only time the tenant hears from them is when rent is due or when something has gone wrong. There are no check-ins or even an acknowledgment that they exist.
While you don’t technically owe it to your tenant to be their friend or check on them, being invisible usually isn’t a good practice. This creates a transactional dynamic where the tenant feels like a source of revenue for you rather than a person. And transactional relationships don’t typically turn into long-term ones.
You should aim for some periodic communication that isn’t tied to a payment or a problem. It goes a long way.
- Rigid Lease Enforcement
Lease terms exist for a reason, and enforcing them consistently protects your property and your investment. But there’s a difference between being firm and not using any judgment or flexibility.
A tenant who has paid on time for 18 months straight and asks for a three-day grace period because of a payroll issue deserves some leniency. They aren’t the same as a tenant who is a week late every month on rent – so don’t treat them the same. Context matters, and landlords who apply every rule with zero nuance end up sabotaging these relationships.
The flip side is clear communication about expectations from the start. At the beginning of the landlord-tenant relationship, always walk through the lease with new tenants and explain the reasoning behind the rules. And whenever you do need to enforce something, be direct but respectful.
- Not Investing in the Property
Tenants notice when a landlord stops investing in the property. Signs of a deteriorating property communicate that you don’t care and are simply collecting rent. This approach obviously damages the relationship and the investment simultaneously.
You don’t have to turn every rental property into a penthouse suite in the Ritz Carlton, but you should do enough to keep the property at a level that’s acceptable for the type of rent you’re charging. And at the very least, you need to keep it safe and livable.
Adding it All Up
Landlords who build strong tenant relationships aren’t doing anything revolutionary. They simply know how to communicate well and treat people as, well, people. If you do that, you’ll be able to foster healthier business relationships and be profitable for many years to come.






